HPE Flexible Capacity delivers a pay-as-you-go solution that enables you to scale instantly to handle growth needs without the usual long procurement process. Without tying up capital, your capacity doesn’t run out.
Watch this video to find out more.

Many procurement departments are still using traditional manual processes or outdated technology. The result? Rogue spending, missed discounts from supplier contract pricing, reconciliation headaches, and the list goes on.
These business risks are driving more organizations towards the cloud-based, secure, and workflow-friendly world of eProcurement solutions. These solutions are saving money and resources, improving use of budgets and personnel, enabling centralization, and using data to improve and streamline end-to-end purchasing processes.
Download this report to learn about:
Procurement trends from 400 organizations surveyed
Operational and cost-savings benefits of eProcurement
Leading features and functionality in eProcurement
Adoption best practices and how to get started

New forces are reshaping the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector – and SAP anticipates that they will spur more change in the next five years than has been seen in the last 50. While the sector’s focus for the last half-century was getting consumers into retail stores to shop, we anticipate a focus shift to seizing “moments of opportunity.” This involves serving consumers when and where they need it. Sourcing and supply chain leaders are playing a key role in driving this evolution.

Life sciences is an industry on the move. Driven by regulatory changes, manufacturing capacity, and margin pressures, the industry’s supply chain and procurement leaders are relying heavily on contract manufacturing organizations (CMOs). These relationships require new ways of managing product quality and costs across the supply network. Learn how a true digital strategy can optimize internal and external processes – and extend them beyond the enterprise – so you can excel in today’s complex market.

Life sciences is an industry on the move. Driven by regulatory changes, manufacturing capacity, and margin pressures, the industry’s supply chain and procurement leaders are relying heavily on contract manufacturing organizations (CMOs). These relationships require new ways of managing product quality and costs across the supply network. Learn how a true digital strategy can optimize internal and external processes – and extend them beyond the enterprise – so you can excel in today’s complex market.

New forces are reshaping the fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) sector – and SAP anticipates that they will spur more change in the next five years than has been seen in the last 50. While the sector’s focus for the last half-century was getting consumers into retail stores to shop, we anticipate a focus shift to seizing “moments of opportunity.” This involves serving consumers when and where they need it. Sourcing and supply chain leaders are playing a key role in driving this evolution.

Last week, SAP Ariba held a human trafficking roundtable event at its SAP Hudson Yards New York City
offices. The roundtable focused on the United Nations Global Compact that adopted 17 sustainable
development goals for its 2030 agenda two years ago. While most individuals and businesses believe
slavery was abolished years ago, there are currently over 40 million forced laborers worldwide. The
United Nations Global Compact initiative is assisting in highlighting the problem of modern slavery,
forced labor, and noncompliance with human rights. And this initiative lines up quite well with
procurement and global supply chains.

Over the next 10 years, companies will face more opportunity and disruption than ever before. Digital transformation is already helping companies redefine their business models, operating processes, and work – and this trend will accelerate as powerful technologies mature. Given that up to 65% of the value of a company’s products or services is derived from its suppliers1, procurement will play a leading role in enabling this transformation.